4,870 research outputs found
Diversity of graphs with highly variable connectivity
A popular approach for describing the structure of many complex networks focuses on graph theoretic properties that characterize their large-scale connectivity. While it is generally recognized that such descriptions based on aggregate statistics do not uniquely characterize a particular graph and also that many such statistical features are interdependent, the relationship between competing descriptions is not entirely understood. This paper lends perspective on this problem by showing how the degree sequence and other constraints (e.g., connectedness, no self-loops or parallel edges) on a particular graph play a primary role in dictating many features, including its correlation structure. Building on recent work, we show how a simple structural metric characterizes key differences between graphs having the same degree sequence. More broadly, we show how the (often implicit) choice of a background set against which to measure graph features has serious implications for the interpretation and comparability of graph theoretic descriptions
Alternative Route to Strong Interaction: Narrow Feshbach Resonance
We show that a narrow resonance produces strong interaction effects far
beyond its width on the side of the resonance where the bound state has not
been formed. This is due to a resonance structure of its phase shift, which
shifts the phase of a large number of scattering states by before the
bound state emerges. As a result, the magnitude of the interaction energy when
approaching the resonance on the "upper" and "lower" branch from different side
of the resonance is highly asymmetric, unlike their counter part in wide
resonances. Measurements of these effects are experimentally feasible.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Implications of 3-step swimming patterns in bacterial chemotaxis
We recently found that marine bacteria Vibrio alginolyticus execute a cyclic
3-step (run- reverse-flick) motility pattern that is distinctively different
from the 2-step (run-tumble) pattern of Escherichia coli. How this novel
swimming pattern is regulated by cells of V. alginolyticus is not currently
known, but its significance for bacterial chemotaxis is self- evident and will
be delineated herein. Using an approach introduced by de Gennes, we calculated
the migration speed of a cell executing the 3-step pattern in a linear chemical
gradient, and found that a biphasic chemotactic response arises naturally. The
implication of such a response for the cells to adapt to ocean environments and
its possible connection to E. coli 's response are also discussed.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures, submitted to biophysical journa
The Unremarkable Things Matter: A Book Review of David Silverman\u27s A Very Short, Fairly Interesting and Reasonably Cheap Book about Qualitative Research (2nd ed.)
In this review of the book, A Very Short, Fairly Interesting and Reasonably Cheap Book about Qualitative Research by David Silverman, I write from the perspectives following Silverman’s arguments about “unremarkable things matter” in qualitative research. Based on his inspiring thoughts on modern qualitative research, I also express my reflective ideas as a doctoral student
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